*Visit the most recent data on U.S. immigrants.
There were a record 43.2 million immigrants living in the U.S. in 2015, making up 13.4% of the nation’s population. This represents a fourfold increase since 1960, when only 9.7 million immigrants lived in the U.S., accounting for just 5.4% of the total U.S. population. Click on the expand buttons below the summary tables to see detailed tables for each.
Click here for a PDF of all the tables below and read the accompanying blog post. Download the Excel workbook.
For a profile of the Hispanic population in the United States, click here.
Population/Region of Birth/Nativity/Language Use/Race/Years in the U.S.
Population (#) |
43,158,110 |
Born in Mexico |
26.8% |
Citizen |
48.0% |
Speaking English at least very well (ages 5 and older) |
51.0% |
White alone, not Hispanic |
18.1% |
Age/Gender/Marital Status/Fertility
Median age (in years) |
43 |
Female |
51.4% |
Married (ages 18 and older) |
59.8% |
Women ages 15-44 giving birth in past year |
7.4% |
Educational Attainment and Enrollment (highest degree completed, ages 25 and older)
High school graduate or less |
51.6% |
Two-year degree/Some college |
18.7% |
Bachelor’s degree or more |
29.7% |
Work/Earnings/Income (ages 16 and older)
In labor force (among civilian population) |
66.0% |
Median annual personal earnings (in 2015 dollars, among those with earnings) |
$28,000 |
Median annual household income (in 2015 dollars) |
$51,000 |
Poverty/Health Insurance
Living in poverty |
16.5% |
Uninsured |
22.2% |
Homeownership and Household Characteristics
In family households |
86.3% |
Region and Top Five States of Residence in 2015
West |
34.6% |
California |
24.7% |
South |
32.9% |
Texas |
10.7% |
Florida |
9.5% |
Northeast |
21.3% |
New York |
10.5% |
New Jersey |
4.6% |
Midwest |
11.1% |
Source: Pew Research Center tabulations of 2015 American Community Survey (1% IPUMS) “Statistical Portrait of the Foreign-Born Population in the United States, 2015”